Invisible Suburbs: Recovering Protest Fiction in the 1950s United States

Invisible Suburbs: Recovering Protest Fiction in the 1950s United States

Invisible Suburbs: Recovering Protest Fiction in the 1950s United States

Invisible Suburbs: Recovering Protest Fiction in the 1950s United States

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Overview

Were the 1950s an oppressive or a liberating time? Some scholars argue that the Red Scare, newly institutionalized discrimination against gays, and a public discourse saturated with sexism left wounds in American society. Others trace the origins of sixties liberation movements to the fifties and celebrate America's postwar prosperity or argue that such new phenomena as rock 'n' roll, teenage consumerism, and Beat poetry gave Americans a new sense of freedom and identity. Invisible Suburbs advances a new synthesis of both views from the perspective of literary scholarship. Essayists ask how overlooked literature in the 1950s addressed or anticipated the struggles of disenfranchised groups to receive rights and recognition. Scholars analyze the many ways in which the decade's culture stigmatized women, minorities, and the poor. They uncover work that illustrates how groups and individuals challenged or resisted that oppression, fiction by authors who sometimes found roots in earlier liberation movements and anticipated later struggles. Included, among other essays, are Ian Peddie's examination of how Nelson Algren, keeping alive his Depression-era outrage over class injustice, was condemned by Cold War critics but voiced attitudes that would be picked up by sixties authors and activists; Kathlene McDonald's essay showing how the feminism of Red Scare victim Martha Dodd took a similar path; Ladislava Khailova's writing on disability; and Jennifer Worley's exploration of lesbian pulp fiction of the decade.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781617033285
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication date: 05/01/2012
Pages: 182
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.42(d)

About the Author

Josh Lukin is lecturer of English at Temple University. His work has appeared in many periodicals, among them Modern Language Notes, minnesota review, Comics Journal, and Exquisite Corpse, as well as in the anthology Daughters of Earth: Feminist Science Fiction in the Twentieth Century.

Table of Contents


Introduction: Thirty-Three Years of the Fifties   Josh Lukin     ix
Good Old Boy Masculinity and Same-Sex Desire in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and The Bitterweed Path   Harry Thomas     3
The Wrong Side of Town: A Walk on the Wild Side in an Age of Reaction   Ian Peddie     23
Postwar Left Feminism and Antifascist Resistance in the Cultural Work of Martha Dodd   Kathlene McDonald     41
Anybody's Protest Novel: Chester Himes and the Prison of Authenticity   Stephanie Brown     62
Rewriting Patriarchal Paradigms of Retardation in Elizabeth Spencer's The Light in the Piazza   Ladislava Khailova     85
The Mid-century Pulp Novel and the Imagining of Lesbian Community   Jennifer Worley     104
Afterword: The Conditions of Reception   Josh Lukin     124
Works Cited     135
Contributors     151
Index     155
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